The reality is that with the current financing environment, there will be a ton of "orphaned startups". So if you're startup that raised an angel round of $500k but will need to raise a real Series A down the road from VCs, you may have a tougher time unless of course you are a breakout success (translation: outlier). And with Series A being tougher to raise, that startup will die die or sputter along for a while. Of course, if you can become revenue generating and a real biz, you may be able to live to fight another day.<p>Angels, unfortunately, cannot bridge this gap as they can't write the bigger checks of a Series A, B, etc round. So while there may continue to be seed/super early stage money to start up, it's the follow-ons which will become more difficult. This, of course, may just be natural selection at work and a good thing.<p>Also, while the article talks more about VC, if the stock market falls and uncertainty grows, angel investors will also pull back. Of course, there will be some who will not, but for many, their wealth goes up and down every day with the markets. And if they are feeling less wealthy, their willingness to invest in startups (the new status symbol for many) will also decline.